Why should you read “Crime and Punishment”? - Alex Gendler

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  • Опубликовано: 13 май 2019
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    --
    What drives someone to kill in cold blood? What goes through the murderer’s mind? And what kind of a society breeds such people? Over 150 years ago Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoyevsky took these questions up in what would become one of the best-known works of Russian literature: “Crime and Punishment.” Alex Gendler digs into the classic novel's exploration of alienation, morality and redemption.
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Комментарии • 3,7 тыс.

  • @TEDEd
    @TEDEd  5 лет назад +2981

    Sink deeper into Dostoyevsky's moral quagmire by downloading a free audio version of “Crime and Punishment” from audible.com/ted-ed. And thanks! Every free trial started through this link helps support our nonprofit mission.

  • @marina2783
    @marina2783 5 лет назад +38870

    “Your worst sin is that you have destroyed and betrayed yourself for nothing.”
    one of the best quotes from the book.

    •  5 лет назад +164

      A truly terrifying premise...

    • @asielmilian38
      @asielmilian38 5 лет назад +113

      That's true.

    • @rajashreechowdhury2092
      @rajashreechowdhury2092 5 лет назад +71

      0:03 Not inevitable... Still, curable

    • @thejaneeyre
      @thejaneeyre 5 лет назад +25

      Marry me please!

    • @sacredheart7962
      @sacredheart7962 5 лет назад +122

      I haven't read it yet...but the quote is so true and powerful!!

  • @Anintora
    @Anintora 5 лет назад +17577

    Props to the animator. They never get the credit but they do all the beautiful work.

    • @leeyan9049
      @leeyan9049 5 лет назад +22

      I would say "split"

    • @psychotron2624
      @psychotron2624 5 лет назад +95

      Aarham Khan half of the comments praise the animation.

    • @Anintora
      @Anintora 5 лет назад +25

      @@psychotron2624 I know, just said it for what it's worth.

    • @ravenn2631
      @ravenn2631 5 лет назад +76

      Psychotron26 There can never be enough compliments for stunning work like this.

    • @navonmyhand7999
      @navonmyhand7999 5 лет назад +23

      Wow-How Studio is credited in the decsription for what it's worth

  • @studytime1575
    @studytime1575 3 года назад +16449

    The main reason I am proud to be Russian - I can read Dostoyevsky in the original

    • @kiaaa7330
      @kiaaa7330 3 года назад +1407

      that must be quite an experience. I sort of want to learn russian because translation never captures the work's true essence and even translated russian literature is celebrated, i cant imagine how the original is. But yall's language is really hard (TT)

    • @studytime1575
      @studytime1575 3 года назад +1601

      ​@@kiaaa7330 Unfortunately, Russian language is difficult even for Russians

    • @Guz579N
      @Guz579N 2 года назад +155

      О да

    • @Ehsaaaaan
      @Ehsaaaaan 2 года назад +71

      Aha! You are lucky

    • @sasadhrirao8066
      @sasadhrirao8066 2 года назад +13

      I hate you

  • @bigratman_
    @bigratman_ 3 года назад +14740

    'Well, if you are so smart, why do you lay around in here like a sack and do nothing all day?'
    As a burnt-out 'smart kid' when I first read this book, this line really got to me

    • @jaysreesubaanandavasan777
      @jaysreesubaanandavasan777 2 года назад +458

      As a burnt-out kid who also read this book I can agree

    • @nashleygaile8174
      @nashleygaile8174 2 года назад +186

      this hit harder than I thought it would

    • @geosminh290
      @geosminh290 2 года назад +280

      I’ve never read the book but now I’m intrigued. That line also reminds me of the line from Billy Joel’s song ‘Vienna’, “... if you’re so smart, tell me why are you still so afraid?” Whenever I listen to it, I feel so called out 😞
      Edit: I’ve just finished reading it and I cried at the end of the epilogue lol (I didn’t expect that). Are most Russian novels like this, incredibly gloomy & depressing in the beginning & then hopeful & romantic in the end? 😭😭

    • @funkycensoredcat9000
      @funkycensoredcat9000 2 года назад +121

      Woah, I didn’t know about that term, but “burnt-out smart kid” fits within my life really well.
      I’m glad that I noticed that kind of early and am trying to fix it. (I’m 16 and noticed it some months ago - still trying to pass through it)

    • @chanelle9554
      @chanelle9554 2 года назад +160

      trust me as a 28 year old college graduate with a masters degree... it hits even harder. believe me, you're young and you still have time to figure things out (mentally, emotionally and physically) try not stress yourself out over it.

  • @pixie_laluna
    @pixie_laluna 5 лет назад +6177

    Me : * still have around 13 books left unread on my desk*
    Also me : "For the love of God, I NEED TO GET MY HAND ON THIS BOOK !"

    • @janosk8392
      @janosk8392 5 лет назад +17

      Guttenberg Project should have it free of fees.

    • @rohinisangapur5755
      @rohinisangapur5755 5 лет назад +7

      😆😆sameeeee

    • @yttrium7599
      @yttrium7599 5 лет назад +7

      Me_irl

    • @hotpink000
      @hotpink000 5 лет назад +48

      You never could have described my life better

    • @keretaman
      @keretaman 5 лет назад +24

      Just a month ago, I put aside every other book I had just to read Crime and Punishment a second time (I read it first in 2016). No regrets. It's now one of my favourites.

  • @jesso.4971
    @jesso.4971 5 лет назад +8000

    "Do you understand, sir, do you understand what it means when you have absolutely nowhere to turn?"
    This book gave me anxiety!

    • @clem8818
      @clem8818 4 года назад +83

      Omg i just read this chapter today

    • @magnusm4
      @magnusm4 4 года назад +172

      "throw your soldiers into position from whence there is no escape, and he will prefer death to flight" - Sun Tzu

    • @TroyanMarshall
      @TroyanMarshall 4 года назад +62

      Ah Marmeladov 😪

    • @frankensteinx5378
      @frankensteinx5378 4 года назад +4

      Relatable quote

    • @synchrony_watchmaking
      @synchrony_watchmaking 4 года назад +29

      Am I a trembling creature, whether I have the right?

  • @uniquechannelnames
    @uniquechannelnames 3 года назад +2507

    The scene in this book with the detective interrogating Rodion is just absolutely amazing and incredible. Always brought chills to my spine.

    • @danmwas7967
      @danmwas7967 2 года назад +56

      The way that chapter ended i was sure he was being caught right there🔥, talk about cliffhangers

    • @Sariiy.22
      @Sariiy.22 Год назад +15

      I thought he was talking to me.i really related to that scene.

    • @jovan8691
      @jovan8691 Год назад +63

      All of their encounters are brilliant. The one where Porofiry Petrovich pretends not to think that Raskolnikov is the murderer is ingenious and brilliantly constructed in its psychological aspects by Dostoevsky, however their encounter after that where Porofiry reveals his exact thoughts and plans is incredibly touching. The explanation of Nikolai's false self-denunciation through his desire for "taking on one's suffering" and giving a part of oneself away for salvation because of his past and then offering for Raskolnikov to confess his crime for the same reason. "For suffering, Rodion Romanovitch, is a great thing". Deeply Christian.

    • @staror890
      @staror890 Год назад +7

      Agreed ! with the little laughs from Porfiry Petrovich

    • @kaynetuohy7588
      @kaynetuohy7588 Год назад +1

      Did u know that “ Columbo” is based on that detective?

  • @anik_2109
    @anik_2109 2 года назад +947

    One of the reasons I love this book is that it doesn't just say "Poverty leads to murder" and shows us examples of all these characters that handle problems such as poverty differently, we have a complete opposite of Raskolnikov - Dmitri Razumikhin, who is definitely my favourite character and brings so much into both the book and Rodion's eventual redemption. There's also Sonya, whose faith and goodness inspired Raskolnikov, especially considering how much Sonya has suffered throughout the story.

    • @skyroc6872
      @skyroc6872 Год назад +11

      The idea of this book is not that "Poverty leads to murder"

    • @anik_2109
      @anik_2109 Год назад +37

      @@skyroc6872 Yeah I know, that's the point of my comment ;)

    • @ochumel_chem
      @ochumel_chem Год назад +34

      Razumikhin is such a great guy, I adore him. He doesn't develope crazy theories, but works hard and helps people

    • @boredsage8746
      @boredsage8746 7 месяцев назад +22

      Razumikhin was the actual goat, he took all the annoying shenanigans of Raskolnikov and still insisted on helping him and his family

    • @anik_2109
      @anik_2109 7 месяцев назад

      @@boredsage8746 facts!

  • @hsryu5569
    @hsryu5569 5 лет назад +15733

    The animation really fits the tone and mood of the topic. Its not just splendid animation but the right animation.

    • @TEDEd
      @TEDEd  5 лет назад +642

      Thank you Hyun Seok Ryu! We're glad you enjoyed it.

    • @amrmohamed1387
      @amrmohamed1387 5 лет назад +70

      It's nearly the same as I imagined it

    • @sid98geek
      @sid98geek 5 лет назад +59

      I know. This animation has that sense of horror.

    • @astern.7425
      @astern.7425 5 лет назад +39

      Movie animated like that would be great

    • @aaa2470
      @aaa2470 5 лет назад +24

      The eerie music helps as well

  • @miskay5526
    @miskay5526 3 года назад +7491

    The part where Dostoyevsky describes Raskolnikov's dream about the horse being violently abused got to me so much

    • @bigratman_
      @bigratman_ 3 года назад +405

      Same with me! I don't know what it is about it, maybe that as a boy he was so pure and he stayed with the horse till the end, and he had the dream just after he murdered the pawnbroker and her sister? Mayhaps it's the guilt that he supressed!
      i get far too excited about russian literature please help me

    • @dannyslatty3791
      @dannyslatty3791 3 года назад +2

      @@bigratman_ n demons ofc

    • @bendelianibeka4628
      @bendelianibeka4628 2 года назад +351

      Interesting fact is that : When Dostoyevski was writing that story about horse being violently abused, at that time in Germany, Friedrich Nietzsche went crazy after dreaming about horse being violently abused.

    • @TheWchurchill4pm
      @TheWchurchill4pm 2 года назад +69

      Anyone seen the movie “Fury?” When the talk about Brad Pitt, a battle-hardened veteran, weeping over the slaughter of horses, I wonder if it was a reference to Dostoevsky or to Nietzsche?

    • @qaiszehm1455
      @qaiszehm1455 2 года назад +10

      @@bendelianibeka4628 I noticed this before and I still don't get the relation, didn't find anything online about it either, do you have any resources around it?

  • @YourBelovedM
    @YourBelovedM Год назад +163

    One more thing for you to know. When Dostoevsky was at the labor camp, he spent the whole 4 years with prisoners, people, who committed crime and killed people. He talked to them and learned a lot about criminal psychology, he realized how criminal's mind works before and after the crime, he listened to their guilt that haunted them for the rest of their lives and that drove him to write Crime and Punishment.
    As I Russian Im VERY happy our literature, Crime and Punishment included, gets the attention and love from the others it fully deserves. English translate loses its raw emotions and feelings that it has in the original, but it's still something we are proud about and love deeply.

    • @icecream3281
      @icecream3281 2 месяца назад +2

      i believe its better in Russian language but it would take me long to learn as a Belgian so ill have to go with the Englisch translation .

  • @lejohnwick4111
    @lejohnwick4111 3 года назад +1604

    "I didn't kill the person i killed the idea" Is one of the best lines i have ever read on a book(Sorry for my English)

    • @alexandre.rousselle9684
      @alexandre.rousselle9684 2 года назад +10

      definetly also the line before it

    • @stiddleficks4044
      @stiddleficks4044 2 года назад +13

      is this from the book? if you enjoy this concept you may like “V for Vendetta” because this is the entire message of the story.

    • @nottletottle
      @nottletottle 2 года назад +3

      Wait, wasn't this from the count of monte cristo?

    • @lejohnwick4111
      @lejohnwick4111 2 года назад +2

      @@nottletottle i read in in the book

    • @highlander1075
      @highlander1075 2 года назад +68

      Hi (sorry for my bad english).

  • @bugsbunnyknowsbetter
    @bugsbunnyknowsbetter 5 лет назад +22178

    Russian literature: everything is about suffering.

    • @finalboss5966
      @finalboss5966 5 лет назад +1349

      More like living in Russia as a whole

    • @kyle2034
      @kyle2034 5 лет назад +1726

      The nature of life is suffering. The sooner we accept this the happier we'll be.

    • @alshahriardihan1976
      @alshahriardihan1976 5 лет назад +459

      There is no happiness in existence.. Only suffering.

    • @kyle2034
      @kyle2034 5 лет назад +308

      @@alshahriardihan1976 I spoke in relative terms, "happier" vs "happy". Happiness in itself is not a worthwhile goal, but I do believe those who seek to form meaningful lives are happier than those who don't.
      That being said, I do believe true happiness will be found in death for those who have faith in God.

    • @endropia3481
      @endropia3481 5 лет назад +69

      Вот

  • @poweroffriendship2.0
    @poweroffriendship2.0 5 лет назад +4733

    *_And let's not forget the crime and punishment about Mr. Krabs selling Spongebob's soul for 62 cents._*

    • @nurhusni
      @nurhusni 5 лет назад +41

      I kinda forgot about that.

    • @fbi7568
      @fbi7568 5 лет назад +55

      Lets not forget how the flying dutchman payed mr.krabs to take back spongebob

    • @pikiwiki
      @pikiwiki 5 лет назад +8

      62 cents! It's a crime!

    • @jesuschrist4315
      @jesuschrist4315 5 лет назад +7

      I don't get it..Can someone please explain??

    • @DA-bm2mj
      @DA-bm2mj 5 лет назад +5

      but what was the punishment?

  • @crisfalizz
    @crisfalizz Год назад +1516

    на уроках литературы без упоминания о сонечке не обходилось ни разу, так что слегка странно не увидеть её здесь. но, боже, это было красиво.

    • @april9501
      @april9501 Год назад +18

      ++++ было просто восхитительно

    • @______5530
      @______5530 Год назад +70

      Никогда не любила ее. И какой же был взгляд у учителя, когда я это сказала при нем) Благо, он человек понимающий и для него главное - аргументы. Не думаю, что мы смогли бы столько всего *обсудить* с другим преподавателем. Лучший ♡

    • @vinnie-chan
      @vinnie-chan Год назад +43

      Потому что фокусироваться на любовном интересе только из-за того, что так принято - априори неправильный подход. Персонаж Сони в рамках книги второстепенный, а сцен и вовсе имеет столько же, сколько у третьестепенных персонажей. Так что упоминать её и религию - совершенно не обязательно, поверхностно описывая суть книги.

    • @neyrashu3332
      @neyrashu3332 Год назад +161

      @@vinnie-chan Соня далеко не второстепенный персонаж-она воплощение идеала Достоевского- смирение, сострадание и благодетель. Она победила всю теорию(Сведригайлова, Раскольникова и Порфирия). А романтическая линия Раскольникова и Сони - идейная часть произведения..так что ваше высказывание совершенно неверно, что показывает поверхностное прочтение романа.

    • @neyrashu3332
      @neyrashu3332 Год назад +66

      @@vinnie-chan и насчет религии я с Вами тоже не соглашусь. Достоевский был верующим человеком и веру заложил в произведение. Даже сцена чтения Евангелие, которая по-сути уже окончательно подводит Раскольникова к признанию «перерождению». Религия играет не малую роль в этом Произведении

  • @AjayVerma-hk1db
    @AjayVerma-hk1db 3 года назад +573

    After watching this, I read the Crime and Punishment and fell instantly in love with the Fyodor Dostoevsky's work.

    • @kiaaa7330
      @kiaaa7330 3 года назад +2

      hi, which translator's version did you read? Im finding garnett's everywhere but someone recommended Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky

    • @pratzqwtyy
      @pratzqwtyy 2 года назад +18

      @@kiaaa7330 buy crime and punishment (vintage classic) it is translated by Pevear and Volokhonsky. Constance Garnett’s translation is good too.

  • @chatnoir1224
    @chatnoir1224 5 лет назад +4917

    Raskolnikov means "broken", "divided", "disorganized" in Russian

    • @lizlovelace5677
      @lizlovelace5677 5 лет назад +75

      not a very strong connection, though

    • @thedamntrain
      @thedamntrain 5 лет назад +728

      @@lizlovelace5677 It's actually more like "breaker" or "splitter". This is much more accurate translation

    • @user-zm7dm5nn4v
      @user-zm7dm5nn4v 5 лет назад +287

      There also were (and I suppose still is but slightly reformed) a religious group of Old-Believers (старообрядцы) sometimes referred as Raskolniki who practiced Eastern Orthodox Christianity rituals as they were before Russian Orthodox Church splitting (in Russia it calls Raskol) in 17th century due to the changes in rituals and liturgies. They were hunted, heavily punished and exiled from the society for their beliefs which led to their seclusion.

    • @cjv8522
      @cjv8522 5 лет назад +176

      Not exactly. Roskolnik (Раскольник) means shatterer or breaker. Roskolnikov would be that plus the suffix of a regular russian last name.

    • @merrittanimation7721
      @merrittanimation7721 5 лет назад +31

      Well it's what he to that lady's head, it's quite appropriate.

  • @russianrenaissance2514
    @russianrenaissance2514 5 лет назад +4036

    Dostoevskys writing is so good, it hurts. You will be destroyed by his books, and you will want more. Pure genius.

    • @karelkrajicek6607
      @karelkrajicek6607 5 лет назад +10

      Like G.R.R Martin?

    • @russianrenaissance2514
      @russianrenaissance2514 5 лет назад +98

      @@karelkrajicek6607 well I'm Russian, so Dostoevsky is closer to my heart

    • @karelkrajicek6607
      @karelkrajicek6607 5 лет назад +5

      @@russianrenaissance2514 sure thing, I was just asking if Dostoevsky's writings is similar to G.R.R Martin, because I never red the Crime and Punishment.

    • @MyKrabi
      @MyKrabi 5 лет назад +101

      So true! Am Canadian and am disappointed there is no Russian literature in our schools - it makes Dickens look like a boring soap opera!

    • @thomaszloi9444
      @thomaszloi9444 5 лет назад +52

      @@MyKrabi Dickens is good writer and even Dostoyevsky loved his works

  • @yaelmorales5485
    @yaelmorales5485 Год назад +667

    This animation was much darker than the images I made in my head when I read the novel, but it's amazing. I feel that when reading it I did not measure the magnitude of the acts committed by the characters. I felt sympathy for Raskolnikov and even identified with him, and I felt deeply sorry for Svidrigailov. Watching this animation I think that in my mind the story was like a children's story.

    • @abhinavdp7376
      @abhinavdp7376 Год назад +1

      What were the images in your head?

    • @churro3588
      @churro3588 10 месяцев назад +17

      Why do you feel deeply sorry for Svidrigailov? I'm genuinely curious.

    • @nikkifranklin6440
      @nikkifranklin6440 10 месяцев назад

      Same @yaelmorales

    • @cothinker680
      @cothinker680 9 месяцев назад

      @@churro3588 he have deep heart

    • @aka_babka
      @aka_babka 8 месяцев назад +8

      Svidrigailov did good things, but the amount of violence and pain that he had brought is so much more. He is a doppelganger, a fragment of Raskolnikov's soul, which shows his most cruel and cynical part.

  • @NaptaCA.17
    @NaptaCA.17 Год назад +374

    The last interaction of Raskolnikov and the detective, when the detective says
    “Why, you , Rodion Romanovitch! You are the murderer,”
    gives me chills.

    • @AleksandrKashin-co6tl
      @AleksandrKashin-co6tl Год назад

      it's don't have matter. i don't know why people worry about why he or she kill her. It's gone...

    • @artemis7496
      @artemis7496 Год назад +16

      I loved all of the Detective's interactions with raskolnikov

    • @LaRavachole
      @LaRavachole Год назад +44

      "It was you, Rodion! You've committed the *Crime* and now must face the *Punishment!"*
      - The Detective, probably, I didn't read the book

    • @johnreniel
      @johnreniel Год назад +13

      @@LaRavachole truly one of the lines ever made

    • @mvp9
      @mvp9 Год назад +6

      ​@@artemis7496 Me too, the way he built the tension in the conversation and made Rodia shiver, it was fascinating.

  • @absolutelykoolabnormalitie6995
    @absolutelykoolabnormalitie6995 5 лет назад +6114

    As a Russian, I would like to thank you for how beautifully Russian culture is represented in this video’s animation

    • @katriinmoon9990
      @katriinmoon9990 5 лет назад +205

      Lats Niebling Soviet period has produced a lot of great art works too. Western propaganda has demonized this period for years, so now everyone associates Soviet Union solely with repressions and purges, paying no attention to scientific advancements, cinematography, and overall cultural development. Soviet Union was not 70 years of killing people, so it’s culture has to be celebrated to.

    • @ludb.8853
      @ludb.8853 5 лет назад +103

      @Lats Niebling That's all the problem with Western propaganda : they associate all the period of Soviet Union with Stalin alone. Stalin died in 1953, you know. There was a life after him.

    • @Moonberry94
      @Moonberry94 4 года назад +43

      Lats Niebling you have very superficial view so yes, your opponent is right - you are under influence of western propaganda

    • @murmur1721
      @murmur1721 4 года назад +17

      Ага, в совке была такая культура, что ученых и писателей ссылали в лагеря или расстреливали, только за то, что им не нравился сраный социализм, или на них пришел донос.

    • @shayanvosooghzadeh9707
      @shayanvosooghzadeh9707 4 года назад

      Ya right?

  • @Scotchism
    @Scotchism 4 года назад +5262

    “The two were sitting side by side, sad and crushed, as if they had been washed up alone on a deserted shore after a storm. He looked at Sonya and felt how much of her love was on him, and, strangely, he suddenly felt it heavy and painful to be loved like that”
    This book still haunts me and is a must read for everyone.

    • @Innerversal
      @Innerversal 3 года назад +91

      Oh man. That's beautiful.

    • @nicoletagorea9641
      @nicoletagorea9641 3 года назад +89

      This is one of my many underlined paragraphs in this book! Everyone should read this masterpiece!

    • @shreyanshmohanty4967
      @shreyanshmohanty4967 2 года назад +34

      i read the book when i was fairly young. it gave me ptsd. i still get nightmares that i unwittingly caused a death and the guilt is drowning me. chilling.

    • @mk-vg6vg
      @mk-vg6vg 2 года назад +1

      which translation is that? sorry for asking after 2 years btw lmao

    • @timilamaharjan2619
      @timilamaharjan2619 2 года назад +13

      @@mk-vg6vg Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky!

  • @jakethomas7005
    @jakethomas7005 Год назад +284

    Crime and Punishment is the perfect book for young students as it essentially acts as a dummy run for our own desires - mainly to have money and to see ourselves as exceptional individuals - but then exposes the destructive emotions that can break us down. A fantastic novel with an excellent warning to us all. If you like audio books then I would suggest listening to the version narrated by Michael Sheen.

  • @theresak5906
    @theresak5906 2 года назад +2992

    Reading this book is like getting vaccinated against falling for lowbrow literature. I was 17 when I read the Crime and Punishment and I tried reading the Vampire Diaries afterwards. I literally couldn't get further than the first 20 pages because it seemed to be so trivial and unsophisticated

    • @lauraenright3667
      @lauraenright3667 2 года назад +248

      I’ve also noticed that I cannot watch movies and TV shows for the life of me, yet I can read books in full.

    • @s1m337
      @s1m337 2 года назад +69

      THIS IS SO RELATABLE AHAHAHA

    • @mimia.4810
      @mimia.4810 2 года назад +74

      But the vampire diaries as a show is everything I don't care 💀

    • @Tunapie
      @Tunapie 2 года назад +102

      well vampire diaries is for when you want some light reading

    • @katattack907
      @katattack907 2 года назад +111

      Haha! That rang true to me. It's hard to go from thrilling masterpiece to pop fiction and not feel a little underwhelmed.

  • @eb2464
    @eb2464 4 года назад +2679

    "'Dostoevsky's dead,' said the citizeness, but somehow not very confidently.
    'I protest!' Behemoth exclaimed hotly. 'Dostoevsky is immortal!" - The Master and Margarita

    • @yzhassan2606
      @yzhassan2606 4 года назад +63

      I loved that book!

    • @thepassingpawn
      @thepassingpawn 4 года назад +28

      Just finished reading that. U stole my comment lol

    • @in_my_book
      @in_my_book 4 года назад +52

      О боже эта фраза очень сильно вбивается в голову

    • @seaweedseaside5905
      @seaweedseaside5905 3 года назад +16

      Kot Behemot, what a character!

    • @pikiwiki
      @pikiwiki 3 года назад +11

      a masterpiece. especially Behemoth and the trial of Yeshua Ha Nostri

  • @shouryadriptasircar3923
    @shouryadriptasircar3923 4 года назад +2213

    'Nothing is harder than telling the truth and nothing is easier than flattery' -Rodian Romanovitch Raskolnikov

    • @anastasijapetrovic6554
      @anastasijapetrovic6554 3 года назад +165

      It is said by Svidrigailov, as I can remember :)

    • @thrallion
      @thrallion 3 года назад +38

      @@anastasijapetrovic6554 Yup just finished the book, Svidrigailov said this

    • @ankursingh1912
      @ankursingh1912 3 года назад +15

      Svidrigailov***

    • @thrallion
      @thrallion 2 года назад +5

      @Middle Child I mean maybe, but they also may have just read it a long time ago and forgotten who said it. Personally I only caught this error because I finished the book only the week before my comment

    • @jarrodyuki7081
      @jarrodyuki7081 2 года назад +1

      burn all copies of this book.

  • @satthyas3698
    @satthyas3698 3 года назад +488

    Raskolnikov being called "a murderer" by the porter.....sent chills down my spine.

    • @Antonio_Serdar
      @Antonio_Serdar 2 года назад +9

      It wasn't the porter

    • @nithin1729s
      @nithin1729s 2 года назад +1

      +1

    • @nanubhaimemewaale
      @nanubhaimemewaale 2 года назад +13

      the artisan* and yes, felt the same bruh

    • @meridaskywalker7816
      @meridaskywalker7816 2 года назад +14

      Damn, that scene was so frightening....

    • @charliejones3973
      @charliejones3973 2 года назад +15

      I remember this, for a moment I thought Dostoyevsky was going to delve into the supernatural, he was almost toying with the idea throughout the novel. However I'm glad it all remained grounded in reality, humans in their own right are interesting enough. An absolutely beautifully written piece of literature!

  • @mechailreydon3784
    @mechailreydon3784 3 года назад +330

    Man this was such a page turner. Don’t be put off by its size this book is definitely one of the most profound pieces of literature out there!

    • @earlgrey5521
      @earlgrey5521 Год назад +3

      385 pages read. 50 were readable, the rest 200 year-old psycho babble with zero humour.
      One of those self-perpetuating myths that you "have to read it".
      Well, you don't. Even though I will probably finish the last 150 about Katarina Ivanovna & co, who are having their full names repeated throughout the book, up to ten times per page to my enormous frustration.
      Why won't anyone state that the Emperor is wearing very little clothing?

    • @topgear3128
      @topgear3128 Год назад +3

      @@earlgrey5521 i have the same opinion about neon genesis evangelion. The same thing, both some depressed guys going through internal struggle, boring.

    • @maracujaizsrbije6738
      @maracujaizsrbije6738 Год назад +18

      @@earlgrey5521 Nabokov is that you?

    • @bionicleapple1254
      @bionicleapple1254 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@topgear3128 I don't think "depressed internal struggle" is the right term to describe Raskolnikov. Dude literally murdered 2 innocent people and has to live with the constant guilt while also trying not to get caught for it

    • @ASmartNameForMe
      @ASmartNameForMe 7 месяцев назад

      @@bionicleapple1254yeah Shinji and Rodion are two very different people and characters

  • @alexanderlarsen5641
    @alexanderlarsen5641 4 года назад +140

    Dostoevsky was everything, he was a strict Christian, a faithful atheist and freethinker, a rabid nihilist, a stout anti-nihilist, a hardcore conservative, a radical liberal, a simpleton, an intellectual, a man obsessed with despair, a man who embraced the beauty of life, he had it all in him. That's what makes him so great, he had a taste of everything and used it all to create some of the most fascinating characters in all the literary world.

    • @nbeutler1134
      @nbeutler1134 Месяц назад +1

      He epitomizes true wisdom. I'm convinced there's nothing about the human condition he didn't understand in its entirety.

  • @helrilda
    @helrilda 5 лет назад +564

    When I just started reading the book I told a girl in my class that Raskolnikov was willing to murder an elderly pawn-broker because of his poverty, and my teacher just said "I can tell you haven't read the book". So she taught us that his main drive was to confirm his inhuman theory and prove himself to be Napoleon-like.

    • @bbblueblun
      @bbblueblun 4 года назад +56

      I didn’t see it like that until he started talking about his theory in the book.

    • @charlescalthrop2535
      @charlescalthrop2535 4 года назад +40

      Daniela H. Same, though it didn’t come out of nowhere as the novel set up Raskolnikov’s ego and charcater very well.

    • @ImperativeGames
      @ImperativeGames 3 года назад +77

      It was both, but he wasn't wise enough to understand himself

    • @aleksandrafedora03
      @aleksandrafedora03 3 года назад

      Yep

    • @LightDragon777
      @LightDragon777 3 года назад +47

      @@ImperativeGames Yeah, I think it was both. Although I think the initial reason was because of poverty, but he tries to rationalize it later in the book with the "great men" theory.

  • @hiiloveu1521
    @hiiloveu1521 Год назад +67

    A bit surprised it doesn't say anything about Sonya here. Dostoyevsky basically made her an image of a saint despite the nature of her "job" and she played a crucial role in Rodion's life

  • @_chrshcmps
    @_chrshcmps 3 года назад +1047

    I like to thank the anime Bungou Stray Dogs to introduce me to Crime and Punishment. That anime really marketed me to reading literature such as this one.

    • @lilo3423
      @lilo3423 3 года назад +21

      Same)))

    • @suhani5033
      @suhani5033 3 года назад +38

      HI BSD FAMMM

    • @RandomObsession
      @RandomObsession 2 года назад +15

      Yess samee

    • @deactivatedcrmUw
      @deactivatedcrmUw 2 года назад +71

      uh oh careful with no longer human then, that's a grim one

    • @_chrshcmps
      @_chrshcmps 2 года назад +52

      @@deactivatedcrmUw that's my first one to read way before I even watch BSD and yes.... It's really that grimm but also my fav

  • @justadudeintheworldman.120
    @justadudeintheworldman.120 3 года назад +788

    I read this book over a decade ago & still remember the way the murder scene made me feel. I felt the author actually committed the crime it was described with such detail.

    • @zbd9499
      @zbd9499 Год назад +44

      YEAH! I felt ın that way too,but ın my opinion the author wanted to make us feel that we committed the murder.

    • @syedkalimullar9538
      @syedkalimullar9538 4 месяца назад

      😂

  • @sabihasaima6435
    @sabihasaima6435 5 лет назад +593

    WHO is the animator!!He deserves an award

  • @seeker11
    @seeker11 Год назад +403

    When Raskolnikov picked the axe and said:
    "It's Raskolnikov time" that was the moment I knew, I was reading one of the books of all time.

    • @skyrozx
      @skyrozx Год назад +19

      underrated comment

    • @tonyshape2276
      @tonyshape2276 Год назад +43

      bruh 💀

    • @motivatedman4630
      @motivatedman4630 Год назад +4

      Неплох.

    • @hornysanders6244
      @hornysanders6244 Год назад +1

      Raskolnikov, its you!! You're the american psycho?!!

    • @sterlingcale1242
      @sterlingcale1242 Год назад +8

      Don't forget those iconic closing lines-
      "...and with that, through which all the hearts of man eduredth, one gotten and begotten, Raskolnikov in his cell, waiting his days. With the new testament given him by soon he calls his own, he holds, and so his mind recalls which grace and sacrifice had fated him a savior, with him, waiting, upon hope, a due crime and punishment"

  • @floatinginmyroom
    @floatinginmyroom Год назад +56

    In Crime and Punishment, Dostoyevsky really captures the inner dialogue that one has with themselves at every moment. It was one of the characteristics of the book that makes it really special I think.

  • @kirapokelmann618
    @kirapokelmann618 5 лет назад +1312

    I study comparative literature, and this was one of the books I looked forward to reading. Not a lot of people understood Raskolnikov, they thought he was winy and couldn't handle even the smallest decision without overthinking. I could understand his anxiety over the small stuff, and his sensitivity over his crime, though he is still a very complicated figure. He's one of my favorite literary characters, and though his intentions seem very uncertain throughout the book, the ending was still a big surprise in my opinion.
    I liked this video, its always nice to learn more about the authors behind the work and the animation fits with the book's atmosphere. The inner workings of Raskolnikov's mind can sometimes feel dark and a bit claustrophobic concerning his own thoughts. I definitely recommend this book to anyone who likes thrillers, and I can assure that the wait will be worth it. Enough ranting now.

    • @MrMineHeads.
      @MrMineHeads. 5 лет назад +13

      Prince Andrei Bolkonski is probably my favourite but Raskolnikov is a close second.

    •  5 лет назад +18

      I read the book when I was 10 or something. I still can visualize some scenes from the book including the crime scenes. I remember I enjoyed the book a lot. It might in fact be my favourite book. I don't know how it affected my psychology though.

    • @kirapokelmann618
      @kirapokelmann618 5 лет назад

      @@MrMineHeads. im yet to begin with that work, maybe raskolnikov will get some competition in my mind :)

    • @MrMineHeads.
      @MrMineHeads. 5 лет назад +2

      @@kirapokelmann618 omfg Tolsty really makes some of the best characters in literature. Such a tough book (Tolsty didn't call War & Peace a novel) but so worth it. You become enchanted by the way he writes and the development of his characters. You also get lost because of the hundreds of names and are forced to continue to look up character lists online.

    • @erinisabella8494
      @erinisabella8494 5 лет назад +5

      Kira Pökelmann I have recently finished the book for school and I see his flaws and why they can make him a compelling character, but the ending (if you include the epilogue) upset me. I wish it wasn’t included in the first place since it took away the closure I had gleamed from the original one. I just love Dostoyevsky’s style but his female characters are either saviors yet frail or unimportant. Thought I do love the book in its entirety, I just want to fix so many things about it.

  • @Damonistique
    @Damonistique 5 лет назад +2173

    Your animation is incredible!
    Thank you from Russia :3

    • @keithuwu184
      @keithuwu184 5 лет назад +5

      wholesome

    • @aceruza2644
      @aceruza2644 5 лет назад +13

      Yes indeed товарищ!!!

    • @ksuefremova3775
      @ksuefremova3775 5 лет назад +14

      Thank you from Belarus)

    • @Damonistique
      @Damonistique 5 лет назад +5

      @@ksuefremova3775 только-только вернулась из Витебска и области...🙀 Были там на майских, хорошо так)

    • @ksuefremova3775
      @ksuefremova3775 5 лет назад +7

      @@Damonistique😊в следующий раз приезжайте в Минск, тут тоже очень здорово:)

  • @azua4489
    @azua4489 10 месяцев назад +45

    This book was heavy, and the feeling of constant cold I had while reading it will be something I will always remember. I could feel the desperation of wanting to escape poverty, rationalizing a horrible act and how much one can rationalize themselves as someone great but then ultimately realizing that if it's not the sense of unaccomplishment, it's the guilt that kills you. You cannot escape suffering.

  • @-.Oz.-
    @-.Oz.- 3 года назад +89

    2:27 Imagine being sentenced to death, coming to terms with and at the last moment being released. That would break anyone. Some of the people sentenced along with Dostoyevsky went crazy.

  • @forestpepper3621
    @forestpepper3621 4 года назад +176

    Dostoyevsky's "Crime and Punishment" is the most disturbing novel that I ever read. My high school English class was assigned to read it. There are plenty of other novels and stories with much more violence and killing, but somehow "Crime and Punishment" really gets under your skin. Perhaps this is because Dostoyevsky takes the reader into the mind of the main character and makes his thoughts so human, rather than something melodramatic that you would find in lesser literature.

    • @thejoyofreading7661
      @thejoyofreading7661 4 года назад +10

      Kafka wrote that a book should be an axe for the frozen sea within us. I think Dostoevsky does it pretty well.

    • @anji8170
      @anji8170 Год назад +1

      Ward 6 by Chehov for me also interesting work, relatively same by their atmospere:3

  • @faizmuhammadazad8824
    @faizmuhammadazad8824 5 лет назад +951

    What a coincidence I am currently reading Crime and Punishment.

  • @chuuyanakahara1913
    @chuuyanakahara1913 3 года назад +2039

    I'd just like to thank Bungou Stray Dogs for getting me here

  • @fyodordostoyevsky6043
    @fyodordostoyevsky6043 3 года назад +204

    I could not refuse this RUclips recommendation.
    Thanks Ted-ed

  • @Laura-vs6fs
    @Laura-vs6fs 4 года назад +896

    This book got me into russian realism. I loved it and my favorite character has been Razumihin. He is to me, what Raskoljnikov would be, if he made good choices and he is a good friend and person. Also, let's not forget Sonja, as she is the embodiment of the noble russian soul. One thing I admired about Raskoljnikov is, when he tried to murder himself, he didn't do it and found the strength to move on, where others would not. He abandoned his family and friends, didn't believe in God or any religion or have any other mental pillar to lean on. Many find strength only in these things and the question here is, why live on, if not for yourself.

    • @bigratman_
      @bigratman_ 3 года назад +39

      > feed ill murder friend soup
      > become my favourite character

    • @daydreamingawweline7744
      @daydreamingawweline7744 3 года назад +17

      Actually,he became religious in the end

    • @alexk3393
      @alexk3393 2 года назад +46

      Ir Russian literature we have a trope called "speaking surname"(or explaining surname). So surname (Razum)ihin translates to something like "sense" or "mind" and (Raskol)nikov to something like "fracture" or "separation" and Sonya... Well "Sonya" is literally is "sleepyhead".

    • @logisticinlinearreg9514
      @logisticinlinearreg9514 2 года назад +4

      he didnt murder himself because he felt himself was weak and pathetic, who couldn’t overcome the instinct conventional morality (consciousness). Which he didnt realise, it was the consciousness sustains him to live.

    • @silasmartin5210
      @silasmartin5210 2 года назад +5

      @@daydreamingawweline7744 in the epilogue he reads the gospel I believe

  • @qfox16789
    @qfox16789 5 лет назад +273

    These ‘why you should read’ videos really hype you up. Every book they do sounds like the most exciting thing ever. You just wanna drop everything and read crime and punishment

    • @thedamntrain
      @thedamntrain 5 лет назад +7

      And this book is actually worth reading

    • @nandinisahu1716
      @nandinisahu1716 4 года назад +17

      Actually it's the contrary for this book... because the video still can't describe how genuis and complex it really is... It can't hype it up enough

    • @bbblueblun
      @bbblueblun 4 года назад +3

      They even make me wanna read Don Quixote 😟

  • @spreefeech7634
    @spreefeech7634 3 года назад +104

    I finished reading this just now and man i think I am in love with dostoevsky 😁
    In all seriousness though, i admit in the beginning I thought that as an Indian I might not be able to relate as much with the characters and the plot (due to obvious cultural differences and I was fine with that). But reading this has only made me realize that suffering is same everywhere. And I have kind of started to believe that it is the only thing keeping us human and connected with each other ( If I am making any sense )

    • @yethir7327
      @yethir7327 2 года назад +1

      100% . As an Indian I agree with this.

    • @raazmarahimi908
      @raazmarahimi908 2 года назад +2

      And I think i am in love with the Raskolnikov ;) :D

  • @connorduquette1432
    @connorduquette1432 2 года назад +95

    I think the thing that I was most surprised about was how well the story holds up. Moral quandaries and philosophical questions aside, it's just got an entertaining plot and surprisingly likable and relatable characters.

  • @LukeFaulkner
    @LukeFaulkner 5 лет назад +291

    The animation captures the mood and spirit of the book in its use of colour and style. Kudos to the animators, whoever you are!

    • @JohnSmith-nf8fd
      @JohnSmith-nf8fd 5 лет назад

      I agree. it captures the bleakness and atmosphere of greys

    • @alyonaprikhodko5538
      @alyonaprikhodko5538 4 года назад +1

      Luke Faulkner animation is great but colors were more like yellow or ocher in this book. And that’s important, because color there means a lot

  • @utsavvejani
    @utsavvejani 4 года назад +1502

    I just finished reading this book, and if anyone is aware about it, in epilogue section there is a bizarre and absurd similarity of Raskolnikov’s dream in hospital (prison) and current corona virus pandemic

    • @fahim.m.choudhury
      @fahim.m.choudhury 4 года назад +73

      I finished the book two days ago and noticed exactly the same thing that you mentioned!

    • @jeremydavie4484
      @jeremydavie4484 3 года назад +73

      These comments couldn't be more true, lol. I just finished it today too! The scene about the wars and propaganda is also very reminiscent of the Marxist revolt in Russia, and also the Marxist BLM revolt in America right now, so you are definitely on to something.
      But I thought it was so beautiful how Raskolnikov experienced God's grace with Sonya in those same pages. The theme of Lazarus couldn't be more perfect in a book written by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, who himself had a major religious conversion.

    • @rooxoxo321
      @rooxoxo321 3 года назад +26

      That page alone gave me more shivers than any part of the book

    • @llliiillliiilll404
      @llliiillliiilll404 3 года назад +75

      This is why it called Classics. Because nothing really new were invented since then and the text stays relevant for thousands of years :)

    • @utsavvejani
      @utsavvejani 3 года назад +12

      Ilya Libin That’s a nice way to put! If a text stays relevant for thousands of years, it’s a classic.

  • @isakirajai9310
    @isakirajai9310 Год назад +27

    Yeah!! I also read Crime and Punishment in my mother language Tamil and i was surprised to see the thought process of Dostoevsky..how a man can understand one's mind so immensely?...Such a great writer i have ever read....

  • @esotericmind3250
    @esotericmind3250 3 года назад +60

    One of my favorite novels i've ever read. This story really makes you see society in many different perspectives. Not to mention it somehow makes you question your own conscience & judgement. The ending was bitter sweet but oddly poetic as much a harlot & a murderer can have.

  • @Enragedguy24
    @Enragedguy24 4 года назад +87

    "Man is a vile creature, and vile is he who calls him vile for it"

  • @Sameer_Hussain_007
    @Sameer_Hussain_007 3 года назад +166

    It’s been almost 4 months since I finished the book. I return to this ted-ed clip every once in a while and this brings me tears every time. I read it somewhere that memories are strengthened by emotions, and this short video brings back some of those emotions that I experienced in this 650-page novel. I’ve read a lot of great men, but Dostoyevsky is something else. Most men speak to your head, Dostoyevsky speaks to your soul. If you don’t “believe” in a soul, then read Dostoyevsky and you’ll discover it.
    I’m currently reading “The Brothers Karamazov” (Ted-ed, please create a video on this), considered by many to be the greatest novel ever written in the history of mankind.

    • @ultimasolucion6904
      @ultimasolucion6904 Год назад +1

      What did you think of the tavern scene between Ivan and Alyosha and their conversation

  • @cullenmott7614
    @cullenmott7614 2 года назад +30

    man I would LOVE to see the whole book animated like this video, that would be exactly what the world needs

  • @_Rey_Oscuro_
    @_Rey_Oscuro_ Год назад +36

    (Sorry, my English is very bad).
    It's wonderful! I'm live in Russia and I'm proud to be able to read Dostoevsky in the original. All words in this video beautiful. Many details of the novel and the writer's life are noticed.
    It was said to be interesting to read despite the large text. All the works of Dostoevsky are fascinating.
    The video is lovely!

    • @aulendor4639
      @aulendor4639 Год назад +7

      Зачем люди продолжают извиняться за свой плохой английский? Вижу подобное из раза в раз в секциях комментариев. Что это за комплекс такой?
      Для нас английский - иностранный язык. Мы не обязаны им владеть в совершенстве и тем более не должны стесняться, если слабы в нём. И между прочим: мы, как правило, говорим на нём только потому, что собеседники сами не знают ни одного другого языка.
      В мире, где столько сервисов для перевода, в том числе встроенных в сами браузеры по умолчанию и работающих автоматически, о таких вещах совершенно нет смысла переживать.

    • @activecrown5253
      @activecrown5253 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@aulendor4639Calm down, mate

  • @bradhuygens
    @bradhuygens 3 года назад +288

    This and War & Peace are the best books I have ever read. They are absolute masterpieces in their own separate ways

    • @mariamoreno1262
      @mariamoreno1262 3 года назад +1

      Which translation do you recommend?

    • @bradhuygens
      @bradhuygens 3 года назад +24

      @@mariamoreno1262 The Pevear and Volokhonsky was good for Crime and punishment, but I didn't like their translation of War & Peace. I also listened to an audiobook of crime and punishment narrated by George Guidall when I tackled the book a 2nd time, and it was phenomenal

    • @ImPedofinderGeneral
      @ImPedofinderGeneral 3 года назад +5

      wow, I am russian and I never finished it. Some parts very interesting, but it mixed with condenced boring

    • @ultimasolucion6904
      @ultimasolucion6904 Год назад +1

      @@mariamoreno1262 Constance garnet versions are pretty widely available and are some of the earliest English translations around, the authoress was from the late 1800's and translated much of the Russian classic literature Dostoevsky, Tolstoy etc

    • @bazhumke4040
      @bazhumke4040 10 месяцев назад

      @bradhuygens surprised to hear that. i read the voloknonsky translation of anna karenina and that was fantastic- weird that they would've struggled with another of tolstoy's great works.

  • @ninijavakhishvili8894
    @ninijavakhishvili8894 4 года назад +34

    "All people seem to be divided into 'ordinary' and 'extraordinary'. The ordinary people must lead a life of strict obedience and have no right to transgress the law because they are ordinary. Whereas the extraordinary people have the right to commit any crime they like and transgress the law in any way just because they happen to be extraordinary."
    I was amazed while reading this quote. It made me realise how many points of views exist in this world on so many subjects. And how Raskolnikov thinks about crime just blows my mind.

  • @harukaanagary7602
    @harukaanagary7602 2 года назад +47

    As a Russian,I'm happy to know that so many people read this masterpiece

  • @archer_3837
    @archer_3837 3 года назад +80

    I know I'm not the only one who thinks about Fyodor's ability from bsd

    • @dazaiosamu4689
      @dazaiosamu4689 3 года назад +7

      Bsd gang

    • @suhani5033
      @suhani5033 3 года назад +6

      i love both doestovsky's

    • @pantydropperr6002
      @pantydropperr6002 2 года назад

      what did his ability do?

    • @dazaiosamu4689
      @dazaiosamu4689 2 года назад

      @@pantydropperr6002 murder

    • @dreesh5941
      @dreesh5941 2 года назад +1

      anyways yes bsd so good i cant get over it manifesting for season 4 ;;;-;;

  • @marialinietsky8365
    @marialinietsky8365 3 года назад +155

    3:19 - 3:47
    Sounds like a lot of books, movies, manga, etc wouldn't exist without this archetype. I immediately thought of Death Note.

    • @C-F98
      @C-F98 3 года назад +35

      Honestly, Raskolnikov's spiral was illustrated a lot better than Light's. I think the DN creator could do a lot better if he spent a little more time on the prologue.

    • @Gadget-Walkmen
      @Gadget-Walkmen 3 года назад +2

      @@C-F98 Nah the Pacing of Death Note was great enough as it was.

    • @LEVENTSELEVE686
      @LEVENTSELEVE686 2 года назад +3

      His struggle with Porfiry reminded me of Light's struggle with L.

    • @infernalyouth516
      @infernalyouth516 2 года назад +1

      DN was inspired by this book

  • @RashidMBey
    @RashidMBey 5 лет назад +226

    Wow. I was absolutely entranced the entire video. Whew. Ted-Ed has shattered the droll expectations we have for educational videos. This was AMAZING. I'm DEFINITELY interested in reading this book now.

    • @GabiN64
      @GabiN64 5 лет назад +1

      same. I've always been aware of this book but thought it was solely about politics

    • @marinameilenstein
      @marinameilenstein 4 года назад

      I agree. This video is a masterpiece

    • @mohammadbayazid5064
      @mohammadbayazid5064 3 года назад

      What until you read the ending

  • @saumyasharma6790
    @saumyasharma6790 2 года назад +25

    Okay I just finished this book today. Absolute masterpiece. For me it was a love story and a book about hope

  • @dresdendiary2037
    @dresdendiary2037 3 года назад +20

    Oh my dear Lord, the animation! It is perfect. Narration and sound effects are on par.

  • @joannexdd5628
    @joannexdd5628 5 лет назад +394

    What's interesting about it is Napoleon theory. According to it there are humans and superhumans, lice and napoleons. If you are a "Napoleon" you can decide about things that matter, you can decide whether someone gets to live or not. And this theory was one of the reason behind the crime, finding out if he was special enough to kill or not.

    • @couchcamoteChannel
      @couchcamoteChannel 4 года назад +20

      There's actually a Filipino movie which was inspired by this, Norte, End of History by Lav Diaz. The character also a law student, killed the pawn ladt but not because of poverty, but to try to put justice in his hands, beleving his intellect makes him above the limit, like Napoleon.

    • @bbblueblun
      @bbblueblun 4 года назад +10

      I agree with this. That whole conversation he had with Porfiry- I believe it was- on his own article was very intriguing .

    • @spacey9707
      @spacey9707 3 года назад +2

      so in todays Napoleons are our government?

    • @trangmai8273
      @trangmai8273 3 года назад +14

      Check out "death note" !!!!!

    • @josephjames335
      @josephjames335 3 года назад +3

      Trang Mai 😂😂 Good recommendation, I’ve actually never thought of the connection

  • @nayan454
    @nayan454 3 года назад +264

    He made me feel sympathy for a character like svidrigailow. What an incredible author

    • @---kj1rl
      @---kj1rl 2 года назад +24

      His suicide scene

    • @AussieAvgeek98
      @AussieAvgeek98 8 месяцев назад +9

      Svidrigailov was an awful person, but I could feel a slight of sympathy when he finally realized that the dream of him being with Avdotya Romanovna would forever remain that way, a mere dream, it is almost as if at that moment he finally snapped and realized all his misdeeds were for naught and that there was nothing left for him on this world, I have some sympathy for him towards that.

  • @nonywrites
    @nonywrites 3 месяца назад +4

    Finished reading Crime and Punishment yesterday. I feel like a part of me is gone, this book is truly unforgettable.

  • @athenapol7507
    @athenapol7507 Год назад +38

    Crime and Punishment is not just a book for me. Dostoyevsky is the writer who made me realise the importance of literature and expand my way of thinking via this novel. This may not be the first 'serious' book that I read , but it is the one that lead me to discover my passion for reading and writing . I have always liked philosophy , but due to my age ( I am 17 years old , 16 when I read the book) I considered literature to be boring. It was my father who gave me this masterpiece and said that he had studied it too around my age. I was not hesitant . I felt dump instead for not discovering that world earlier.
    After finishing it I was not the same person again and I am not exaggerating. I feel that now I can distinct whether or not sth is actually worth reading/listening/seeing it. Like a another comment I saw , I can't read books without essence anymore and find it really annoying when the others can't appraise the value of this work , or claim that it is 'boring' without even reading it. At least I had given it a shot ... they just deny what I say and prefer to discuss other unimportant matters

  • @rutwiksakhare7324
    @rutwiksakhare7324 5 лет назад +2979

    Ted-ed: why should you read crime and punishment?
    Me: * immediately orders it on Amazon *
    It's not a joke. I really ordered it.

    • @hamzahaytham3940
      @hamzahaytham3940 5 лет назад +72

      The real question would be, did you read it tho?

    • @rutwiksakhare7324
      @rutwiksakhare7324 5 лет назад +90

      @@hamzahaytham3940 I am currently reading something else. But I will get to reading this book, after.

    • @andreavalentyna
      @andreavalentyna 4 года назад +8

      Haha same!

    • @siddhantmanav9051
      @siddhantmanav9051 4 года назад +16

      hahe...So did i.....reading “kafka on...” though

    • @ryusensei7300
      @ryusensei7300 4 года назад +13

      @@siddhantmanav9051 yeah kafka on the shore was pretty good, I already read it about 3 months ago

  • @GS-ju3sr
    @GS-ju3sr 4 года назад +36

    “In spite of the momentary desire he had just been feeling for company of any sort, on being actually spoken to he felt immediately his habitual irritable and uneasy aversion for any stranger who approached or attempted to approach him.”

    • @thecarlitosshow7687
      @thecarlitosshow7687 3 года назад

      Sounds like someone with a broken psyche or double personality

  • @finalgeneration1462
    @finalgeneration1462 2 года назад +8

    "The last moment had come, the last drops had to be drained! So a man will sometimes go through half an hour of mortal terror with a brigand, yet when the knife is at his throat at last, he feels no fear."
    Perfect.

  • @mattakubodimasen10
    @mattakubodimasen10 3 года назад +16

    Read this once when I was 15 and fell in love. That was how I started reading.
    Still my favourite to this day. This book is phenomenal.

  • @zur137
    @zur137 5 лет назад +148

    Apart from being an informative and interesting, this animation is extremely engaging and beautiful.

  • @elenavash5440
    @elenavash5440 4 года назад +302

    Обожаю то, как носители английского произносят русские имена :D
    Спасибо за видео! Посмотрела на это великое произведение немного с другой стороны.

    • @MotaMoto77
      @MotaMoto77 2 года назад +3

      А мне нравится как мы произносим их имена, так же тупо и неправильно

    • @elenavash5440
      @elenavash5440 2 года назад +41

      @@MotaMoto77 в моем комментарии нет сарказма. Для меня это действительно красиво и забавно только в смысле необычно, и немного сочувствия к тому, как для них сложны наши сочетания звуков

    • @basils.254
      @basils.254 Год назад +1

      @@elenavash5440 Если вы в Питере, я бы хотел выпить с вами кофе, и вы услышите, как американец говорит по-русски)

    • @elenavash5440
      @elenavash5440 Год назад +1

      @@basils.254 К сожалению, я в Минске :) возможно однажды я побываю в Питере и у нас будет возможность встретиться)

  • @catehowell735
    @catehowell735 2 года назад +5

    Wow, the writing and animation for this are stellar. The music too. Well done, team.

  • @SamxHardscoperx
    @SamxHardscoperx 3 года назад +8

    Loved this video. I’ve finally dived into Dostoyevsky’s works the last few weeks, and started Crime and Punishment today. It’s the 4th book I’m on, and the one I’ve been the most interested to read.

  • @aviewerman
    @aviewerman 5 лет назад +104

    The animation by WOW-HOW studio in this video is the best one Ted-Ed has had yet! And that IS saying something! Congratulations!

  • @user-mh2cc4jf3f
    @user-mh2cc4jf3f 4 года назад +296

    - Dostoevsky died, - said the citizen, but somehow not very confidently.
    - Objection! - the Hippopotamus exclaimed hotly . - Dostoevsky is immortal!
    (Mikhail Bulgakov, roman "the Master and Margarita»)

    • @trueuttar
      @trueuttar 4 года назад +39

      >Hippopotamus
      Isn't the correct translation the Behemoth, which refers us to a biblical demon?

    • @mon0lithic629
      @mon0lithic629 3 года назад +9

      @@trueuttar could be. After all, the Russian word for hippo is бегемот (Behemoth)

    • @ImPedofinderGeneral
      @ImPedofinderGeneral 3 года назад +3

      @@mon0lithic629 and it refers us to a biblical demon too) . But yes, Cat Behemoth should not be translated as hippo

  • @lucija2005x
    @lucija2005x Год назад +9

    I finished this book recently and it was an assigned reading for school. I'm still amazed - the novel really made me think and the characters felt so real. I don't think I'll ever forget this book

  • @lawrencetalbot8346
    @lawrencetalbot8346 Год назад +6

    I read this in high school YEARS ago after my English teacher suggested I would really enjoy it. Idk why I listened to her as back then I absolutely hated reading, but I’m so glad I did. Ever since then I’ve been an avid reader. Thank You Mrs. Reywinkle, you’ll never know what an impact you’ve had on me.

  • @TheEternalOuroboros
    @TheEternalOuroboros 5 лет назад +160

    It’s a fantastic book. Delving into the psyche of a psychologically fragmented nihilist. Just bloody read it people.

    • @anakein
      @anakein 4 года назад

      Do you speak/understand Russian? I would like to ask you this then. The "raskol" in the surname Raskolnikov definitely refers to a psychological split or fragmentation as you say. I've always wondered, what would be an apt surname for one who is "integrated" or "whole", having resolved or healed the split that is?

    • @user-hw9nc8yz1m
      @user-hw9nc8yz1m 3 года назад +1

      @@anakein tselniy - kov

    • @anakein
      @anakein 3 года назад

      Okay! Thanks!! :)@@user-hw9nc8yz1m

    • @apes4days254
      @apes4days254 3 года назад +4

      I wouldn't call Raskolnikov nihilist

    • @napstablook6900
      @napstablook6900 3 года назад +1

      He is not a nihilist

  • @abrahamanthony976
    @abrahamanthony976 3 года назад +55

    As a literature student i have read many novels of many authors and times some of my favorites include 'Mill on the Floss', 'Hard Times' and of course 'Crime and Punishment''. i read crime and punishment some 3 or 4 years back and whenever i hear the name of the novel i get chills its like the whole life of Raskolnikov come and goes in a flash and i say to myself what a novel that was. The novel shows the power of true love can do anything....imagine if there was no character called sonia then what would would have happened to the Rodion Raskolnikov....We all need someone who will be sonia to us....

  • @HairFIip
    @HairFIip 2 года назад +23

    My favorite novel to this day every since I had to read it in high school since it was part of our curriculum. I never really liked most of the required reading books in school but Crime and Punishment I was able to finish reading in 4 days when the entire book was to be read and discussed for two weeks in our class. I still have my own copy on my bookshelf.

  • @harshaharikumar1759
    @harshaharikumar1759 Год назад +5

    I finished reading the book today, I am 14, this was so thrilling, the way characters are portrayed and each of them has adequate vindication for each of their acts speaks in volume about Dostoevsky' immaculate narrating style and how it drags us to 19th century Russia and tells the story of alienation, suffering, acceptance, pride, love, helplessness and remorse.
    Raskolnikov's mind is really intricate and takes us to a psychologically terrifying world as we unravel each layer of mystery.
    This is certainly one of the most appreciated and iconic books of all time.
    It took me 25 days to read it and it was definitely worth the time.❤️

  • @nastyadarkred
    @nastyadarkred 5 лет назад +277

    "Преступление и Наказание" - моя любимая книга

    • @igorkorzun5988
      @igorkorzun5988 5 лет назад +6

      по приказам гимназии, я был вынужден читать ее в 16 лет. Тогда я не мог понять уроков Достоевского. Я надуюсь что теперь, будучи взрослым, я смогу усечь его мысль

    • @reedackerman3775
      @reedackerman3775 4 года назад +3

      @tolo olivares "Crime and Punishment" is my favorite book.

    • @BigWetTits1
      @BigWetTits1 3 года назад

      Вас ждёт ещё много удивительного в мире хорошей литературы!

  • @Blazer1394
    @Blazer1394 4 года назад +37

    I have an ambition to be an accomplished writer and after reading Crime and Punishment, Dostoyevsky has humbled me to the core

  • @rdvrlrn
    @rdvrlrn 3 года назад +14

    I’ve come here quite often, and I feel like it’s time to remark that this is my favorite video on youtube. The gloomy visuals and the harrowing narration of this video were what inspired me to read this. Thank you.

    • @gpgp
      @gpgp Год назад

      Hi metal girlie

  • @themask9820
    @themask9820 Год назад +7

    This video made me read Crime and Punishment and the Brothers Karamazov. I highly recommend both books and hope for a video just like this for The Brothers Karamazov as well.

  • @fakedude1626
    @fakedude1626 5 лет назад +70

    One of the best animations so far, absolutely stunning.

  • @thepassingpawn
    @thepassingpawn 4 года назад +35

    "But that is the beginning of a new story-the story of the gradual renewal of a man, the story of his gradual regeneration, of his passing from one world into another, of his initiation into a new unknown life. That might be the subject of a new story, but our present story is ended."
    That part 2 never happened for the good

    • @Euclib
      @Euclib 3 года назад +3

      Plot twist... Raskolnikov is the underground man... dun dun DUNNN

    • @thepassingpawn
      @thepassingpawn 3 года назад +1

      Lol, probably@@Euclib

    • @kriketprayme
      @kriketprayme 3 года назад +1

      I wish it did. I'm gonna write the part 2 lol

  • @HamzaAlBelushi
    @HamzaAlBelushi Год назад +16

    “I did not bow down to you, I bowed down to all the suffering of humanity.” - Raskolnikov replies to Sonia’s demand for an explanation as to why he kissed her foot.

  • @katexy7179
    @katexy7179 Год назад +7

    This book was one of the best experiences of my life-I took multiple courses on it throughout my education, in different languages, thus read it multiple times and it not one second felt like a waste of time. Simply brilliant, each and every word of it. The rest of Dostoyevski's works are also amazing but this one was captivating and unforgettable, stunning- a work of a true genius!

  • @snakey934Snakeybakey
    @snakey934Snakeybakey 5 лет назад +80

    Dostoyevsky flirted with socialism, but was against it in the end. He makes this clear in notes from underground.

    • @Nikola95inYT
      @Nikola95inYT 5 лет назад +16

      Sadly, he went into full christian later.. he said things like if christ and truth contradicts each other, he will choose christ. What a shame.

    • @SparkerBlaze
      @SparkerBlaze 4 года назад +17

      Nikola95inYT it’s not shameful if you think about it though

    • @reigenlucilfer6154
      @reigenlucilfer6154 3 года назад +1

      @@Nikola95inYT how is it shameful exactly.

    • @Nikola95inYT
      @Nikola95inYT 3 года назад

      @@reigenlucilfer6154 shameful to being a socialogist who must use scientific methods. It's a very important quality of any writer.
      But to religious people it's not a shame. It would be a highest honor to follow Christ whatever happens to a person.

    • @VandalCleaver
      @VandalCleaver 3 года назад +1

      based

  • @khaaaled2007
    @khaaaled2007 5 лет назад +37

    One of my favourite works of fiction, I'm reading the Brothers Karamazov now and I'm in awe at Dostoevsky's brilliance

    • @luisaguilar7997
      @luisaguilar7997 3 года назад

      Easily my favorite book, what did you think about it?

  • @krisjohnston971
    @krisjohnston971 6 месяцев назад +4

    This is by far the greatest book I’ve ever read. So gripping. A masterpiece.

  • @scuderia7683
    @scuderia7683 2 года назад +12

    I have just finished it. It was amazing, please someone recommend more books like this one🙏

    • @ihikebc2295
      @ihikebc2295 2 года назад

      Not a work of fiction, but also in the vein of spirituality and miracles is one of the most popular Russian books of the last decade - "Everyday saints". Check it out, it's quite a fascinating read.

    • @theninjaofmusic
      @theninjaofmusic 2 года назад

      I would recommend Huxleys "A Brave New World" It heavily explores the differences between content and fulfillment and how easy it is to conflait the two.

    • @JH-lu5yg
      @JH-lu5yg 2 года назад +2

      I think Hamlet is similar in a lot of ways if you haven't read that yet.

  • @mirorinee9265
    @mirorinee9265 5 лет назад +18

    My favorite part of this book are the dreams of Raskolnikov and Svidrigailov. They moved me very much.

  • @zoey__m
    @zoey__m 4 года назад +28

    Apart from the brilliance of this book, I need to express my admiration to the animation! It's dreary and beautiful!

  • @colshell5176
    @colshell5176 23 дня назад

    The animation is amazing for the narrative of the story.
    Well done.